Mineral Database (Saesneg yn unig)
Edingtonite
- Silicates
edingtonite is a rare mineral which forms in cavities in mafic igneous rocks and nepheline syenites. It also occurs in hydrothermal veins.
edingtonite occurs as a minor component of sugary white veinlets cutting massive analcime at Benallt manganese mine at the southern end of Pen Llŷn (T.F. Cotterell, unpublished data). Distinct wedge-shaped microcrystals have more recently (July 2007) been discovered at Dolyhir Quarry, near Old Radnor in the Welsh Borderland (Cotterell et al., 2011).
- Benallt Mine, Llŷn, Gwyneddŷ: semi-quantitative XRD analysis of sugary white veinlets cutting massive creamy analcime indicates that 3-6 % edingtonite is present associated with major analcime, banalsite and minor harmotome (T.F. Cotterell, unpublished data).
- Dolyhir Quarry, Old Radnor, Powys: sub mm sized, glassy, characteristic wedge shaped crystals, have been identified in an altered dolerite dyke exposed briefly in 2007. Abundant core-bit twinned prismatic harmotome crystals occur in association (Cotterell et al., 2011).
- The Mineralogy of Dolyhir Quarry, Old Radnor, Powys, Wales. UK Journal of Mines and Minerals, 32, 5-61.